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Can we trust the “trust machine?”

In 2015, The Economist magazine famously dubbed blockchain technology “the trust machine” owing to its ability to create trust in business networks. This capability resonates strongly in the supply chain world, where a lack of trust is a major obstacle to high-level collaboration.

In 2015, The Economist magazine famously dubbed blockchain technology “the trust machine” owing to its ability to create trust in business networks. This capability resonates strongly in the supply chain world, where a lack of trust is a major obstacle to high-level collaboration. The promise of blockchain may be fulfilled in time, but at present its progress is impeded by—ironically—a lack of trust in the technology.

To some extent the problem has its roots in the industry’s healthy skepticism of much-hyped innovations. But there are other trust issues related to the way that supply chains operate. The challenge for blockchain developers and proponents is how to reconcile the technology with these misgivings.

This was a central theme at the recent “Blockchain in Supply Chain: Looking Beyond the Hype” roundtable hosted by the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics. At the event, some 30 organizations talked frankly about the potential benefits of blockchain in the supply chain domain.

Delivering on the promise

Blockchain is a secure, distributed ledger of transactions that can update all authorized users in real time. All records are timestamped and unchangeable. It has the potential to be a powerful technology from a supply chain perspective because it offers the possibility of a single source of truth that facilitates the kind of collaboration that the industry has long struggled to achieve.

That’s the promise. And a slew of test projects in 2017—with many more slated for 2018 as well as some possible deployments—suggest the promise is attainable. But supply chain is far from a greenfield application. To deliver, blockchain must adapt to ingrained supply chain practices.

In 2015, The Economist magazine famously dubbed blockchain technology “the trust machine” owing to its ability to create trust in business networks. This capability resonates strongly in the supply chain world, where a lack of trust is a major obstacle to high-level collaboration. The promise of blockchain may be fulfilled in time, but at present its progress is impeded by—ironically—a lack of trust in the technology.

To some extent the problem has its roots in the industry’s healthy skepticism of much-hyped innovations. But there are other trust issues related to the way that supply chains operate. The challenge for blockchain developers and proponents is how to reconcile the technology with these misgivings.

This was a central theme at the recent “Blockchain in Supply Chain: Looking Beyond the Hype” roundtable hosted by the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics. At the event, some 30 organizations talked frankly about the potential benefits of blockchain in the supply chain domain.

Delivering on the promise

Blockchain is a secure, distributed ledger of transactions that can update all authorized users in real time. All records are timestamped and unchangeable. It has the potential to be a powerful technology from a supply chain perspective because it offers the possibility of a single source of truth that facilitates the kind of collaboration that the industry has long struggled to achieve.

That’s the promise. And a slew of test projects in 2017—with many more slated for 2018 as well as some possible deployments—suggest the promise is attainable. But supply chain is far from a greenfield application. To deliver, blockchain must adapt to ingrained supply chain practices.

If history is our guide, economies take a turn every nine years. Yet time and again, a strong business cycle and fading memories convince us the good times will go on forever. Ten years after the great recession, we surveyed 100 manufacturing firms to find out if businesses are ready to fight through the next recession.

Is Digital Transformation a risk or an opportunity? This webinar will detail Manufacturing industry challenges and how using IoT can address these challenges through optimizing logistics, improving processes and gaining meaningful insights.